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Excerpt of
"Ornamental Alliums" by
Carole Ottesen
For discerning gardeners, ornamental onions are indispensable additions
to the spring and summer bulb display. And now’s the perfect time to
plant them.
Say “bulbs” and the first things to pop into a gardener’s mind are
tulips, daffodils, and crocuses. Alliums are an afterthought. In spite
of remarkable attributes—showy flowers that are great for cutting and
drying, easy culture, exceptional hardiness, deer and vole
resistance—alliums seem to be the Rodney Dangerfields of the plant
world.
This
is hardly a new phenomenon. “Alliums are not so popular in gardens as on
many counts they deserve to be,” wrote Louise Beebe Wilder in her 1936
classic Adventures with Hardy Bulbs. A half century later, Dilys Davies,
author of Alliums, the Ornamental Onions, put it more forcefully,
describing the genus as “undeservedly neglected…attracting a smallish
circle of enthusiasts, plus the odd fanatic.”
It’s hard to single out one reason why
these spectacular bulbs are not more roundly appreciated, but perhaps it
has something to do with their culinary associations. I grew culinary
onions—chives, onions, shallots, and garlic—for years before I got
around to trying the purely ornamental side of the family.
I remember clearly that the first
ornamental onion to come into my garden was a dim second choice. First
choice had been the June-blooming giant alliums (A. giganteum) with
their magnificent six-inch flower heads. I had dreamed of a flock of
them, but when I learned how expensive a single bulb was, in a momentary
paroxysm of parsimony, I opted for a dozen of the cheaper Persian or
“tall drumstick” alliums (A. aflatunense). Thus it was that on a
brilliant October day, while popping in bulbs between clumps of fountain
grass (Pennisetum alopecuroides) that instead of feeling euphoric, I
fretted: Why hadn’t I just bought what I had intended to buy in the
first place? How could 12 bulbs that sold for the price of three be
anywhere near as showy?
The following May proved those worries
unfounded. Four-inch balls made up of hundreds of tiny purple florets
rose on three-foot stalks through a ground cover of emerging fountain
grass. Not only were Persian alliums a bargain, they were spectacular.
And combining them on a low mound with an ornamental grass turned out to
be a stroke of dumb luck. The drainage is good—a requirement of this
summer-dormant bulb—and I hadn’t known that the grass would camouflage
bulb foliage that yellows just as the flowers appear. My Persian alliums
are attractive, healthy, and have returned in greater numbers every
spring for more than a decade, although the flowers have declined
somewhat in size. And it’s a combination that mystifies visitors to the
garden who ask, “What is that grass with those amazing flowers?”
Big-Headed Alliums
Persian alliums belong to a group that
I’ve come to think of as the “big-headed alliums,” an unscientific but
descriptive name that encompasses some showy types of horticultural
origin and mixed parentage.
One of these, ‘Purple Sensation’—to my
eye identical to Persian allium but for its deep, dark violet purple
color—is often listed as A. hollandicum. Crosses of Persian allium with
other species have produced a bevy of beauties with attributes that blur
the distinctions between species. A cross of A. aflatunense with A.
macleanii produced ‘Gladiator’, a rose-purple hybrid, and ‘Lucy Ball’, a
dark lilac-purple selection. ‘Rien Poortvliet’ is an
amethyst-violet-flowered sport of ‘Gladiator.’
Allium ‘Mars’ is a spectacular hybrid that bears six-inch-wide
lavender-purple umbels. Three to four feet tall, it flowers in late
spring. ‘Mount Everest’, with six-inch-wide pure white snowballs, is an
excellent tall selection.
Of course, the poster child of the
big-headed alliums is A. giganteum, the one I had originally lusted
after, smitten by a catalog photo of a softball-sized flower dwarfing a
child. The fall after the May-of-the-Persian alliums, I made haste to
the garden center and spent a small fortune on giant alliums.
Significantly larger than Persian
alliums, giant alliums have celebrity presence. In the June border,
six-inch balls of dark lavender florets on four-foot stems float
majestically above lower-growing perennials. An equally attractive white
form, ‘White Giant’, is also available. Blooming slightly later than
Persian alliums, these giant alliums extend the display and cutting
season.
While Persian alliums provide big, bold
additions to late spring bouquets, giant alliums are bouquets in
themselves. If you plant both, you’ll have two months of terrific cut
flowers that bring long-lasting substance to bouquets and even preserve
well as dried flowers.
These two species flower in concert with
the late-spring-to-summer crowd, including Virginia bluebells (Mertensia
spp.), late daffodils and tulips, honesty (Lunaria spp.), bleeding
hearts (Dicentra spp.), columbines (Aquilegia spp.), Brunnera spp.,
peonies, and oriental poppies. After bloom, balls of quivering seed
heads remain attractive while discreet foliage, amazing in plants that
make such an impact, departs with courteous dispatch and little mess.
Giant allium is sometimes named, along
with A. stipitatum, as a parent of the traffic-stopping ‘Globe Master’,
a Guinness-Book candidate with blooms eight to 10 inches across. Other
sources credit this cultivar’s size to the species with huge heads of
loose, shaggy florets, the star of Persia (A. christophii, formerly
A.albopilosum). Star of Persia bears eight-inch balls of metallic
blue-violet florets on rather disproportionate 15-inch stems. Thriving
in a hot spot, it is said to require
rather
alkaline soil and, like most alliums, demands excellent drainage.
Bigger, but skeletal in flower is A.
schubertii, which seems too outrageous to be real—an explosion of rosy
florets caught in mid-air on an 18-inch stem. I always think of this one
as “the tumbleweed allium,” because I have read that in its native
places—North Africa and central Asia—the dried flower heads eventually
break off the withered stems and, blown by the wind, cast their seeds
abroad as they roll. Drainage is critical for this summer-dormant allium;
I have lost several to long, hot, wet summers. Prudent souls might lift
these bulbs after flowers have faded and replant them in fall.
Photo of Allium afflatunense by Ken Meyer;
photo of Allium schubertii by Carole Ottesen.
Click on images for larger version
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